The second sentence suggests that measuring the idler photon does not impact the signal pattern at all. — keystone
The first sentence suggests that measuring the idler photon does give information on subsets of the signal pattern. — keystone
If the second sentence were true, I would expect all 4 subsets to produce the same signal pattern. — keystone
IMHO, it seems like your mathematical explanation only supports your first sentence. How does it support your second sentence? — keystone
If the second sentence were true, I would expect all 4 subsets to produce the same signal pattern.
— keystone
Why would that be? — Andrew M
I'm assuming locality — Andrew M
I'm wondering if my position could be made more clear if we focused on a simpler experiment. Let's assume that I've set up an experiment that starts similar to the DCQE. The entangled signal photons hit d0 and the idler photons have not yet hit PS. At this moment, does the signal pattern show interference? — keystone
My impression is that you may be holding a minority view here. Is that true? — keystone
I think there is a subtlety related to quantum nonlocality in that it allows some information to be nonlocal but does not allow for faster-than-light communication. — keystone
As for "The simple and obvious fact is that information has to be carried by material objects"...it's not that simple or obvious to me...even though it's obvious that Weinberg was a great man. — keystone
No, the signal pattern never shows interference regardless of what happens to the idler photons. — Andrew M
Interference is only revealed when the idler photons are detected at D1 and D2 and that information is later used to post-filter the signal pattern. — Andrew M
No, most physicists accept locality. — Andrew M
See the Local dynamics column in the quantum interpretations comparisons table. — Andrew M
I'm still confused about how the interference pattern is entirely a postprocessing effect. It seems to me that the signal photons must "know" what will happen to the idler photons so that it can produce the correct signal during postprocessing. If the idler photons don't affect the signal photons, how is it that the "D1" signal photons produce a different signal than the "D2" signal photons? — keystone
...and thanks for your continued comments. I feel like you're explaining things perfectly clear to me and I'm just not understanding! — keystone
This is all physics and a discussion between two people. It's admirable, but why not on the lounge? — jgill
The delayed-choice quantum eraser experiment investigates a paradox. If a photon manifests itself as though it had come by a single path to the detector, then "common sense" (which Wheeler and others challenge) says that it must have entered the double-slit device as a particle. If a photon manifests itself as though it had come by two indistinguishable paths, then it must have entered the double-slit device as a wave. If the experimental apparatus is changed while the photon is in mid‑flight, then the photon should reverse its original "decision" as to whether to be a wave or a particle. Wheeler pointed out that when these assumptions are applied to a device of interstellar dimensions, a last-minute decision made on Earth on how to observe a photon could alter a decision made millions or even billions of years ago. — Delayed-choice quantum eraser - Wikipedia
Thus the signal photon's x-basis state will be directly observable as a detection event at D0a or D0b and predict which of detectors D1 or D2 the partner idler photon will later strike. — Andrew M
For an accessible introduction, here's an excellent analysis and video of the experiment by physicist Sabine Hossenfelder. — Andrew M
At the act of entanglement the photons 'decide' how they're going to act — keystone
I find this quote from wiki to be interesting:
"In fact, a theorem proved by Phillippe Eberhard shows that if the accepted equations of relativistic quantum field theory are correct, it should never be possible to experimentally violate causality using quantum effects." — jgill
The version of the no-communication theorem discussed in this article assumes that the quantum system shared by Alice and Bob is a composite system, i.e. that its underlying Hilbert space is a tensor product whose first factor describes the part of the system that Alice can interact with and whose second factor describes the part of the system that Bob can interact with. In quantum field theory, this assumption can be replaced by the assumption that Alice and Bob are spacelike separated.[9] This alternate version of the no-communication theorem shows that faster-than-light communication cannot be achieved using processes which obey the rules of quantum field theory. — No-communication theorem - Wikipedia
Very interesting. I had assumed that beam splitters act entirely randomly, but from your description it seems that they do not. Is that correct? — keystone
I think I'm slowly getting your point. At the act of entanglement the photons 'decide' how they're going to act, not just in measuring spin, but also in how they will behave at beam splitters and the phase of their interference pattern. — keystone
Let me ask you this then: you've mentioned the z-basis and the x-basis. Are there a finite number of bases or is the number infinite? I ask because if there are infinite, that seems like a lot of 'decisions' to make up front. — keystone
At the act of entanglement the photons 'decide' how they're going to act
— keystone
No wait…the first entangled photon’s behaviour is random but once measured, the other photons behaviour is determined? So in the DCQE are you saying that once the phase of the signals interference pattern is selected the fate of the idler photon is determined? — keystone
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